Earth First! 4, no. 2
This issue of Earth First! includes articles on RARE II (Roadless Area Review and Evaluations) and the US Forest Service’s alleged plans to develop protected wilderness areas.
This issue of Earth First! includes articles on RARE II (Roadless Area Review and Evaluations) and the US Forest Service’s alleged plans to develop protected wilderness areas.
This issue celebrates the publication’s third anniversary with a photo essay.
In this issue of Earth First! stories about the road construction in the Kalmiopsis Wilderness area in Oregon continue. A special section in this issue discusses Earth First! and non-violence in light of the behavior of some EF! members during the Bald Mountain Road blockade.
In this issue of Earth First! the NO-GO ROAD movement proudly reports the halting of the Bald Mountain Road construction through the Kalmiopsis Wilderness in Oregon.
In this issue of Earth First! stories of the NO-GO ROAD movement continue as road blockaders are assaulted by bulldozers in Oregon.
This issue of Earth First! focuses in the NO-GO ROAD movement, in which people assemble to blockade roads in order to stop road constructions through wilderness areas in the US.
Dave Foreman begins this EF! issue’s editorial by discussing to the arrest of Earth First! members Neil Cobb and Bob Seeley at the Salt Creek Wilderness, New Mexico.
In this issue, Dave Foreman expresses his amazement at the positive responses to EF! and Howie Wolke discusses how to preserve real wilderness.
In this issue of Earth First! Dave Foreman posits that the United States Forest Service has assaulted big wilderness areas in the 1920-30s.
In this issue of Earth First! Dave Foreman guides readers through “An Environmental Strategy for the ’80s,” Chim Blea discusses “The Ethics of Vegetarianism,” and Foreman states that Earth First! will begin featuring “provocative and challenging material on Deep Ecology and reviews of the other intellectual currents” in order to win the environmental battle against the neo-conservatives and their “economic views of Earth and life.”